Children Are Born Mathematicians
Children are mathematicians from the day they are born. Even
before they can add or subtract, their relationships with people and
their interactions with the environment set the stage for the
development of mathematical concepts.
There are important similarities between the development of
mathematical concepts and the development of literacy. From the day
they are born, children learn language by listening and by
eventually speaking and writing. Reading to infants, toddlers, and
preschoolers promotes learning to read and write by immersing
children in language and giving them an opportunity to interact with
it.
In the same way, children build the foundations for math during
their first few months. Before they can add or even count, children
must construct ideas about mathematics, such as order, sequence, and
the seemingly simple idea that a number represents a specific
quantity. Children's logical and mathematical thinking develops by
being exercised and stimulated. You can support this development by
offering objects to compare, using rhythm activities and music,
modeling mathematical behavior, and incorporating math into everyday
activities.
Using drums with infants and toddlers can help them experience
mathematics. Take turns repeating each other's beats; first you beat
the drum twice, then she beats the drum twice. If she takes the
lead, echo her playing. This helps support your child's
understanding of a one-to-one correspondence.
Even children under the age of two can be exposed to math every
day. Take advantage of any opportunity to count to help children
understand one-to-one correspondence and quantity. Asking children
to compare groups of objects or quantities helps them develop
concepts of more, less, and the same. Just as reading to infants and
toddlers helps them build literacy skills, using math around
children helps them begin to understand number concepts.
Children who are surrounded with interesting objects are
naturally led to make relationships between those objects. As
infants and toddlers, children should have an abundance of
different-shaped blocks and tiles they can match and compare.
One easy way to promote math to three and four-year-olds is
simply to ask them to use mathematical concepts in their activities.
If your child is using blocks, ask, "How many blocks do you have?"
or "How many more do you need?" Children are willing and even
excited to count objects and make mathematical relationships if you
encourage them. Ask your children to divide up snacks, or help set
the table. They'll get to use their own mathematical problem-solving
ability to figure out the best way to perform the tasks.
Questioning strategies, activities, and simple games offer great
opportunities for parents and other adults to help children
construct basic mathematical concepts. We must understand that
construction of mathematical concepts begins the day a child is
born, and offer young children opportunities and materials to
promote their development of mathematical thinking.
Excerpted from "Children Are Born Mathematicians: Promoting the
Construction of Early Mathematical Concepts in Children under Five"
by Eugene Geist - an article in the NAEYC journal, Young
Children.
Early Years Are Learning YearsT is a regular series from
NAEYC (http://www.naeyc.org/)
providing tips for giving young children a great start on learning.
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